
A drop is the usual culprit, though a damaged 16 Pro screen doesn't always show it the same way:
At 6.3 and 6.9 inches, the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max have the largest screens of any iPhone. A bigger panel means more to get right, and a good one isn't cheap. So we fit an Original-grade display, not a bargain panel. The cheaper screens usually compromise on the ProMotion 120Hz refresh rate and True Tone. With the new display ready, we transplant your Face ID and the front sensors from the old display to the new one. Then we reseal with a fresh gasket and test the touch all the way to the edges, Camera Control included.
From the bench
The iPhone 16 Pro Max has the biggest, thinnest OLED Apple has ever put in a phone. A panel that large and that thin bends easily, so it has to be lifted and seated slowly and evenly, or it can crack on the way back in. It only takes a few careful minutes, but it's part of why the same repair can go smoothly or badly depending on who's doing it.
Most iPhone 16 Pro screens are sorted the same day, often while you wait, and we never hand it back until it's passed a full check. Backing that is an 18-month warranty: if anything to do with the new display plays up later, bring it straight to us and we'll put it right.
It’s a little bit like visiting a doctor. Don’t you like it when your doctor has an understanding ear, and explains the ailment to you?
All things considered, the quality of service is only as good as the expertise of the repairman. Workmanship matters!
All Apple devices, all repairs, we are your one-stop shop. We’re probably the only one in town who do L4 chip-level repair on Logic boards, arguably :)
We inspect thoroughly and share a detailed diagnosis report. You'll know exactly what's wrong before you commit to anything.
Clear pricing before any work begins. Parts, labor, and timeline upfront. You decide whether to go ahead.
1 to 3 days for common repairs. Chip-level logic board work may take up to 2 weeks. We keep you posted throughout.
90-day minimum on every repair. 3 months on chip-level logic board work. 1 year on display replacements.
Honestly, it's too dynamic a figure to publish, and it depends on the model (16 Pro or the larger 16 Pro Max) and the quality option you choose. The Pro Max carries the biggest OLED Apple makes, so a proper ProMotion display assembly costs more than a standard panel, and we'd rather quote you accurately than post a price that goes stale in a month. Drop us a WhatsApp message with your model and we'll share the exact cost.
Yes, with the right panel. This is the catch on the Pro: a cheap display can quietly lock the phone to 60Hz and drop the always-on screen, even when everything else looks fine. The Original-grade panel we fit keeps full 120Hz ProMotion, the always-on display and True Tone, and we confirm all three are working before the phone goes back to you.
Yes. We fit what the market calls an "Original" display. Strictly it isn't an Apple part, since Apple doesn't sell its displays openly, so nobody can offer a true "Apple Original". But in terms of quality and performance, it's on par with the original, and it comes with an 18-month warranty.
Yes, True Tone and auto-brightness work fine post display replacement.
Regarding the "unverified part" message: In MOST cases it goes away after completing the calibration, finally showing up as "Genuine" or "Used" part. That calibration step can be temperamental though, and Apple changes it with every iOS update, so we can't promise exactly how the note will finally read on your phone. What we do guarantee is a display that works perfectly, which is what our warranty covers.
Yes. On the 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max, Face ID sits in a separate TrueDepth sensor assembly, not in the display panel, and we carry those sensors over to the new screen. So a normal screen replacement doesn't affect Face ID. The only time it can't be restored is if those sensors are physically damaged, which is rare with a cracked screen, and we'll tell you upfront if that's the case.
This was a real complaint at launch in 2024, but it was a software quirk, not a hardware fault. iOS was over-eager about rejecting accidental palm touches near the new Camera Control and the thin bezels, so the screen would briefly ignore taps. Apple tuned it in an early iOS 18 update, and on an updated phone today it's a non-issue.
If your screen still freezes or misses touches after you're fully updated, that points to something physical, like a knock to the display or a flex issue, and that's worth a proper check.
No, the old part stays with us. Retaining the replaced part is standard practice across premium Apple repair providers, Apple included, and it is part of how the pricing and warranty on a replacement work. We have explained the reasoning in more detail in this article.
The warranty covers manufacturing defects in the display itself: dead spots, touch playing up, or display going blank on its own. It doesn't cover fresh physical or liquid damage, since those are new accidents rather than a fault in the part.
We fit a fresh sealing gasket to help restore water resistance. Even so, there's no reliable way to test the seal afterwards, and even Apple won't commit to water resistance once a phone has been opened. If the phone is already dented or bent, resistance is reduced and can't be fully restored. We'd recommend keeping it away from liquid, and we can't take liability for liquid damage after the repair.